Introduction
Stroke is one of the most common causes of high mortality rates in Africa with many unknown aspects around its prognosis. In this study we aim to describe stroke characteristics and in-hospital mortality of stroke in Parakou.
Methods
This is a retrospective cohort study including all stroke patients admitted to the Department of Neurology at Parakou Teaching Hospital from January 1, 2013 through to December 31, 2019. Clinical data, vascular risk factors, stroke subtype and outcome data were recorded. The in-hospital case-fatality and its associated factors were determined. The study was approved by the Local Ethics Committee of Biomedical research and has been registered under the unique indentifying number researchregistry5687 and is available at
https://www.researchregistry.com/browse-the-registry#home/
Results
Stroke cases represented 51.5% of all patients. There were 372 patients included in the study with a mean age of 58.2 ± 14.2 years. The sex ratio was 1:3. Ischemic stroke accounted for 40.3%, intracerebral hemorrhage 30.4%, and unknown 29.3%. The main vascular risk factors were hypertension (69.1%), alcoholism (23.9%) and diabetes mellitus (16.9%). The mean NIHSS at admission was 9.4 ± 5.7 and the length of hospital stay was 9.0 ± 7.3. The most common complications recorded during the acute phase were swallowing disorders (10.2%), pneumonia (9.1%) and urinary tract infections (8.3%). The in-hospital case fatality was 6.2% and was associated with loss of consciousness (p = 0.0001), high NIHSS on admission (p = 0.001), fever (p = 0.0001), swallowing disorders (p = 0.001) and leukocytosis (p = 0.021). On discharge, 27.6% were independent and 97.8% were on antihypertensive drugs.
Conclusion
The in-hospital stroke mortality was close to that reported by other studies in Africa.
The purpose of our study was to investigate etiologies of ischemic stroke in the neurology university clinic of CNHU-HKM, Cotonou. Method: It was a cross-sectional, prospective and analytical study carried out from 1 st November 2014 to 31 st August 2015 in the neurology university clinic of CNHU-HKM. We included all patients with stroke whose ischemic nature was confirmed through brain CT scan or magnetic resonance imaging. Data analysis was conducted with Census and Survey Processing System (CSPRO). We carried out bivariate then multivariate analysis in identifying associated factors. Threshold value is estimated at p < 0.05. Results: 104 ischemic stroke patients participated in the study, representing 59.4% of all types of stroke. Mean age was 61.9 ± 12.3 years [26-87 years] with 1.6 as sex ratio. Among vascular risk factors, hypertension accounted for 85.6% of stroke cases. 29.8% suffered from aphasia. Embolic heart diseases and atherosclerosis were predominant, in a proportion of 53% and 26% respectively. Atrial Fibrillation (AF) accounted for 82% of embolic heart diseases. Conclusion: Etiologic investigation of stroke is important and should be systematically carried out. This study enabled to corroborate atherosclerosis predominance in etiologic investigation of ischemic stroke. Patients' outcome could be improved by promptly managing the etiology through adoption of appropriate treatment.
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